Are we truly free? Are our desires truly our own or merely imposed products of the society we live in?

“Film critics’ jury of the 32nd International animated film festival in Annecy (Nadezhda Marintchevska, Avedik Olohadjian and Doris Senn) has decided to give the prestigious FIPRESCI Award to Ona koja mjeri (in English: She Who Measures) by Veljko Popovic.”

The 20th century from an absurd point of view, a lesson of our shameful history. A perfect 3D animation. From the beginning of the second World War this film leads you trough the history of power, money and wars related to them.

A dark comedy, circa 1992, in which an utterly random event reveals the most inhuman aspects of life in a bureaucratic system. A strange substance flies in from nowhere and lands on an unwitting Administrative Analyst, who is slowly consumed. Much paper-filing and bumbling ensues.

Here is a great idea for a videoblog. To enter the site, you have to choose between employee or an executive. You are then asked about who you hate at work and what method you would like to use to get rid of them. The suggestions are then picked by the videoblog creators and are recreated for your cathartic pleasure.

This video, mocked after a ’60s J. F. Kennedy campaign ad, exploits the one man show, Mr. 911 himself. We appologize not for what we put in, but for leaving out all the things that would have made this song too long to watch.

A series of short videos featuring the illustrator Steve Brodner as he draws the Presidential candidates and discusses the race for the White House. The videos are directed by Gail Levin, with animation by Asterisk and camera by Ben Shapiro.

I don’t think he is right as much he is original with what he decides to focus on. He reacts, he isn’t just another echo. Of course, we haven’t come here to listen to him talk about politics as much as see him draw, which he does beautifully. Sometimes I wish I could drop everything and grow a talent like that.